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I've read and contributed to quite a few threads on the subject of sight reading and there has been much valuable advice therein. However, as I see it, one of the most crucial issues has not been addressed satisfactorily, as far as I my searching can determine...

Where can one find a large amount of PROGRESSIVE[/b], graded music which will provide adequate - subjective I know - material to enable one to make meaningful progress in improving this skill? On recommendation I've bought a couple of 'jumbo' volumes of easy arrangements which help to an extent. But, these are not progressive. I know that ABRSM publish books of graded sight reading practice pieces and this is exactly the sort of thing I'm talking about. The ABRSM books do not however provide enough pieces and are relatively expensive. Bartok's 'Mikrokosmos' is progressive but is also not ideal for the purpose of improving sight reading, imo.

Does anyone know of a source of a large number of graded[/b] pieces (perhaps for download?) for sight reading improvement which has helped them? I've made this my major goal for 2009 and as such I want to proceed with maximum efficiency and effect. Randomly chosing 'easier' pieces - from hymnals etc - is, I believe, not the most productive way to make progressive, efficient improvement.

Cruiser, I can't help directly with the question. I'm using what I have at hand. One is "Easy Classics to Moderns" which is edited by Denis Agay whose way or arranging seems to be respected by a lot of teachers (per some PW teachers). It is not progressive per se, but it moves chronologically from music in the mid 1600's to modernish times of the mid 1900's. So as you play through the pieces the style shifts.

I picked up free Bergmueller studies during a conversation. I suppose they should be used as studies, but I used them as sight reading for the time being because they are there. They were different from the first group and I found that to be helpul.

I don't believe this is a valid concern.Graded or ungraded, if you're "practicingsight-reading" it's going to be withmaterial below your level, and that'swhere I see a problem. This is similarto a swimmer or runner doing all hisworkouts at 1/2 effort. He will neverimprove his times that way, because youcan't improve by doing something youcan already do easily. By practicing s-rwith material below your level, you'redoing what you can already do easily,and this is not going to help you at all.You can do this for years, and all thetime and effort you put in will be wasted, because you'll be at the sameplace as where you started, that is,practicing s-r with material belowyour level, because that is the onlything you can s-r, that is, material belowyour level, because "your level" isby definition what you can't s-r andmust work up methodically.

Yet people keep on trying to do it thisway, because that is what books ons-r improvement recommend, practicingwith material below your level. ButI see this as a marketing gimmick. By practicing with material below yourlevel, you of course will be able todo it well, because it's something thatyou can already do easily, and so youthink the book is helping you, when actually you're accomplishing nothing.

Moreover, there is the implication inall this is that by starting s-r practicewith material below your level, you'llbe able to gradually improve to whereyou can s-r at your level. But thatis nonsensical, because you can nevers-r at your level, because your levelis what you can't s-r. The only way youcan raise your s-r level is by raisingyour level itself (and that's difficult),because then the level of what you can s-r is correspondingly raised.

Gyro, thanks for your reply. Suffice it to say that I don't agree with you.

I will say again, however, that I believe the lack of advice in this and the teacher's forums (apologies if I've missed something) with regard to learning sight reading progressively speaks volumes. As I see it, we need to master reading music at grade 1, grade 2, grade 3 etc. etc. ie, progressively[/b]. For those - few - of us doing graded exams this is probably not a problem. For the rest of us, I believe it is. I'm convinced that this is the key to efficient progress. My original question remains... where can one find lots of graded music to practice?

as you too are a collector of sheet music, there may be more progressive works already embedded in your collection than you realize, e.g. inside Henle editions of Scarlatti, Haydn, Mozart Sonates & Klavierstucke, Beethoven bagatelles, Schubert dances etc. One solution can thus be to just start opening books and start skimming for pages with more white page than black ink (or lots of black ink but a largo indication), plomp them down on your music stand and then follow the same routine each time:

1. Quick Scan- what is the style, likely mood?- what is the time signature, approp. tempo, feel?- what key are we in? what does that mean?- which bits look the most challenging and why?- how does it start & how does it end?- what parts are repeated, same or similar?- what abstract structures can I identify that go beyond "lots of individual notes", e.g. a ha! there is an e minor scale, there is a G major chord, that is a chromatic run, that is a Bflat major broken chord, etc. Those you don't have to read them as notes anymore.- listen to the music in your head as you scan (or attempt to hum or sing it if you can't)

2. Test Run- play the start slowly- play the end slowly- try out HS the difficult bits

3. Go for it- set an appropriately slow tempo & stick to it- start playing (focusing on getting the idea across above hitting all the notes)

4. Analyze- what worked well, what didn't?- was I ready for this (was it PROGRESSIVE for me?), why or why not, where yes, where no

Repeat for the same piece again, with learningsRepeat for the same piece again next week

Spending 15-30 minutes of this kind of sight reading practice EVERYDAY (especially never skipping step 1, even if you never go beyond step 1 at times) will bring you dividends to no end (and expose you to lots of interesting music fragments)

The ABRSM sight reading books are often horrible examples of music but do have the advantage of being good indications of what to expect on an exam.

- early method books from Alfred, J Thompson, etc.- the past exam books (& of course the alternative lists from the syllabus which are often filled with great music) from ABRSM at grades that are one or two under your current level- ABRSM Baroque keyboard collections 1, 2, 3- Heller - Kuhlau sonatines- Oscar Peterson Jazz exercises, minuets & etudes- Norton MicroJazz collection

If quick & proper reading of rhythms is a challenge, you could look into doing some remedial work with:

Originally posted by cruiser: Gyro, thanks for your reply. Suffice it to say that your view is so self-evidently ludicrous that I will not waste time on elaborating my response.

I will say again, however, that I believe the lack of advice in this and the teacher's forums (apologies if I've missed something) with regard to learning sight reading progressively speaks volumes. As I see it, we need to master reading music at grade 1, grade 2, grade 3 etc. etc. ie, progressively[/b]. For those - few - of us doing graded exams this is probably not a problem. For the rest of us, I believe it is. I'm convinced that this is the key to efficient progress. My original question remains... where can one find lots of graded music to practice?

I don't really see sight reading (playing something cold) for the sake of it as very beneficial. The key to easy playing is good fingering and that takes time and, for the early grader, guidance. Don't go for quantity, go for quality.

More experienced players should have enough interest in a composer to play through whole volumes in order to study their development or play something unknown out of curiosity - that's when the ability to cold sight read is invaluable.

My teacher uses the sightreading series from MTAC, obviously not free or downloadable, and I don't think each book has a particularly large number of pieces. But it is progressive and tops out at level 7:

the only way to improve sight reading is to sight read regularly. just do it everyday in 10-15 minutes, pick 1 or 2 easier pieces. my teacher suggest it to me, but i didn't follow it strictly, while my constant learning new pieces for lessons in past 3 years actually made my reading skills improved for better.

You could use any graded piano series...it doesn't have to be specifically for sight reading. Just pick up one or more graded piano series (ones that you didn't use to learn to play the piano, obviously )